首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>other >Assessing insect responses to climate change: What are we testing for? Where should we be heading?
【2h】

Assessing insect responses to climate change: What are we testing for? Where should we be heading?

机译:评估昆虫对气候变化的反应:我们测试了什么?我们应该在哪里前往?

代理获取
本网站仅为用户提供外文OA文献查询和代理获取服务,本网站没有原文。下单后我们将采用程序或人工为您竭诚获取高质量的原文,但由于OA文献来源多样且变更频繁,仍可能出现获取不到、文献不完整或与标题不符等情况,如果获取不到我们将提供退款服务。请知悉。

摘要

To understand how researchers are tackling globally important issues, it is crucial to identify whether current research is comprehensive enough to make substantive predictions about general responses. We examined how research on climate change affecting insects is being assessed, what factors are being tested and the localities of studies, from 1703 papers published between 1985 and August 2012. Most published research (64%) is generated from Europe and North America and being dedicated to core data analysis, with 29% of the studies analysed dedicated to Lepidoptera and 22% Diptera: which are well above their contribution to the currently identified insect species richness (estimated at 13% and 17% respectively). Research publications on Coleoptera fall well short of their proportional contribution (19% of publications but 39% of insect species identified), and to a lesser extent so do Hemiptera, and Hymenoptera. Species specific responses to changes in temperature by assessing distribution/range shifts or changes in abundance were the most commonly used methods of assessing the impact of climate change on insects. Research on insects and climate change to date is dominated by manuscripts assessing butterflies in Europe, insects of economic and/or environmental concern in forestry, agriculture, and model organisms. The research on understanding how insects will respond to a rapidly changing climate is still in its infancy, but the current trends of publications give a good basis for how we are attempting to assess insect responses. In particular, there is a crucial need for broader studies of ecological, behavioural, physiological and life history responses to be addressed across a greater range of geographic locations, particularly Asia, Africa and Australasia, and in areas of high human population growth and habitat modification. It is still too early in our understanding of taxa responses to climate change to know if charismatic taxa, such as butterflies, or disease vectors, including Diptera, can be used as keystone taxa to generalise other insect responses to climate change. This is critical as the basic biology of most species is still poorly known, and dominant, well studied taxa may show variable responses to climate change across their distribution due to regional biotic and abiotic influences. Indeed identifying if insect responses to climate change can be generalised using phylogeny, functional traits, or functional groups, or will populations and species exhibit idiosyncratic responses, should be a key priority for future research.
机译:为了了解研究人员如何解决全球性重要问题,至关重要的是要确定当前的研究是否足够全面,可以对总体反应做出实质性的预测。我们从1985年至2012年8月间发表了1703篇论文,研究了如何评估气候变化对昆虫的影响,正在测试哪些因素以及研究的地点。大多数已发表的研究(64%)来自欧洲和北美。专门用于核心数据分析,其中29%的研究专门针对鳞翅目和22%双翅目:这大大超过了它们对当前确定的昆虫物种丰富度的贡献(估计分别为13%和17%)。有关鞘翅目的研究出版物远没有达到它们的比例贡献(已确定的出版物占19%,但鉴定出昆虫物种的39%),半翅目和膜翅目昆虫的报道程度较小。通过评估分布/范围变化或丰度变化对温度变化的物种特定反应是评估气候变化对昆虫影响的最常用方法。迄今为止,对昆虫和气候变化的研究主要集中在评估欧洲蝴蝶,森林,农业和示范生物中具有经济和/或环境关注的昆虫的手稿中。关于了解昆虫将如何对快速变化的气候做出反应的研究仍处于起步阶段,但是当前的出版物趋势为我们试图评估昆虫的响应提供了良好的基础。特别是,迫切需要对生态,行为,生理和生活史反应进行更广泛的研究,以解决更广泛的地理位置,尤其是亚洲,非洲和大洋洲,以及人口增长迅速和栖息地改变的地区。我们对气候变化的分类单元响应的理解还为时过早,要知道是否可以将诸如蝴蝶之类的超凡魅力的分类单元,或包括双翅目在内的病媒用作主要的分类单元,以推广其他昆虫对气候变化的响应。这是至关重要的,因为大多数物种的基本生物学知识仍然鲜为人知,并且由于受到区域性生物和非生物因素的影响,经过充分研究的优势类群可能在其分布范围内显示出对气候变化的不同反应。确实,确定昆虫对气候变化的反应是否可以使用系统发育,功能性状或功能群加以概括,或者种群和物种是否表现出特异反应,应该是未来研究的重点。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
代理获取

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号